Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 714733
Initial magnetic susceptibility measurements in sediments of Croatian and Slovenian rivers
Initial magnetic susceptibility measurements in sediments of Croatian and Slovenian rivers // 14th Castle meeting Book of abstracts / Silva, Pedro M. F. ; Lee, Célia (ur.).
Evora: Universidade Lisboa, 2014. str. 55/186-56/186 (predavanje, međunarodna recenzija, sažetak, znanstveni)
CROSBI ID: 714733 Za ispravke kontaktirajte CROSBI podršku putem web obrasca
Naslov
Initial magnetic susceptibility measurements in sediments of Croatian and Slovenian rivers
Autori
Frančišković-Bilinski, Stanislav ; Bilinski, Halka ; Tibljaš, Darko ; Tomašić, Nenad ; Maldini, Krešimir ; Scholger, Robert
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Sažeci sa skupova, sažetak, znanstveni
Izvornik
14th Castle meeting Book of abstracts
/ Silva, Pedro M. F. ; Lee, Célia - Evora : Universidade Lisboa, 2014, 55/186-56/186
Skup
14th Castle meeting - New trends on Paleo, Rock and Environmental Magnetism
Mjesto i datum
Évora, Portugal, 31.08.2014. - 06.09.2014
Vrsta sudjelovanja
Predavanje
Vrsta recenzije
Međunarodna recenzija
Ključne riječi
river sediments; Croatia; Slovenia; coal combustion; magnetic spherules
Sažetak
Until recently, magnetic susceptibility (MS) measurements of stream sediments have not been used with the purpose of environmental quality assessment in Croatia. First such measurements in Croatia have been performed by Frančišković-Bilinski (2008) on samples from the Kupa River watershed (Figure 1). The area with the highest values of magnetic susceptibility in that watershed was found to be the lower flow of the Mrežnica River. Coal slag and ash, obtained from burning coal in a textile factory in Duga Resa was discharged directly into the Mrežnica River for 110 y (1884-1994), from where it entered the Korana River and further the Kupa River and pollution was traced up to ~50 km downstream. The geoaccumulation index (Igeo) for the anomalous elements and MS determined in the sediment fraction <2mm were: Hg (1.88), B (4.05), Na (1.44), Al (2.05), V (1.65), Cr (1.20), Fe (1.18), Ni (2.10), Cu (2.37), Zr (3.27), Mo (3.34), U (4.03) and MS (5.85). Correlation analysis showed good correlation of MS with: B (0.96), U (0.95), Zr (0.94), Sr (0.93), Na (0.92), Mo (0.92) and Ni (0.90). R-modality cluster analysis indicates linkage of MS with B, Mo, Na and U. Low correlation of MS with Fe (0.36) suggests that Fe is not present in a ferromagnetic form, especially as neither maghemite, nor magnetite phases were identified by XRD. Increased MS values in the Kupa River watershed were also observed in stream sediments of the upper flow of the sinking karstic Dobra River, (Frančišković-Bilinski et al., 2014a), where any anthropogenic source for that contribution is absent. Thermomagnetic curves show a distinctive Curie-point of magnetite at 580°C. Additional transformation observed at 520-560°C comes from titanomagnetite. Significant correlation between MS and iron was not found. Magnetic particles from the Dobra River sediments contain pyroxene, plagioclase, hematite and quartz in addition to magnetite. White spherules within magnetic grains are also present. The major constituent of five separated magnetic spherules is Fe: minor constituents are Ca, Al, Si and Mg. There are numerous trace elements (Mn, K, Na, Ti, Ni, Cr, V, Ba). The ratio Ni/ Fe vs. Cr/Fe suggests that magnetic spherules are impactites, formed either by a shock event caused by meteorite impact or by volcanic processes, what presents a new and exciting finding and deserves further field and laboratory research. Our work continued (Frančišković-Bilinski et al., 2014b) with the aim to perform for the first time low-field MS measurements on a decade earlier collected stream sediments in the frame of a Croatian-Slovenian bilateral project. Links between the MS and chemical and mineral composition of sediments have been investigated in order to determine possible anthropogenic influence. The investigated rivers are predominantly unpolluted rivers from Croatian and Slovenian karstic and flysch areas: the Dragonja, the Mirna, the Raša, the Rižana, the Reka, the Rak, the Cerknišnica, the Unec and the Ljubljanica rivers. For comparison, the Savinja, the Hudinja, the Voglajna rivers and Slivniško Lake from the Celje old metallurgic industrial area (Slovenia) were also investigated. Sediments of the clean karstic and flysch rivers showed extremely low MS values, with MS values ranging from 0.5*10-7 to 5.11*10-7 m3/kg, and IRM values ranging from 0.7 to 7.88 A/m. In the Celje industrial area, river sediments showed much higher MS values, ranging from 1.31*10-7 to 38.3*10-7 m3/kg and IRM values ranging from 0.91 to 100.42 A/m, with the highest MS value found in the Voglajna River at Teharje-Štore, the place which showed significant number of anomalies of toxic metals in our earlier research. Statistically significant correlations were obtained between MS and Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Cd and Ba in the Slovenian karstic region, and between MS and Cr, Fe, Co, Ni and Zn in flysch drainage basins.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Geologija
POVEZANOST RADA
Projekti:
098-0982934-2720 - Međudjelovanja oblika tragova metala u vodenom okolišu (Pižeta, Ivanka, MZOS ) ( CroRIS)
Ustanove:
Institut "Ruđer Bošković", Zagreb
Profili:
Nenad Tomašić
(autor)
Halka Bilinski
(autor)
Stanislav Frančišković-Bilinski
(autor)
Darko Tibljaš
(autor)